scholarly journals “Green pointillism”: detecting the within-population variability of budburst in temperate deciduous trees with phenological cameras

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolas Delpierre ◽  
Kamel Soudani ◽  
Daniel Berveiller ◽  
Eric Dufrêne ◽  
Gabriel Hmimina ◽  
...  

AbstractPhenological cameras have been used over a decade for identifying plant phenological markers (budburst, leaf senescence) and more generally the greenness dynamics of forest canopies. The analysis is usually carried out over the full camera field of view, with no particular analysis of the variability of phenological markers among trees.Here we show that images produced by phenological cameras can be used to quantify the within-population variability of budburst (WPVbb) in temperate deciduous forests. Using 7 site-years of image analyses, we report a strong correlation (r²=0.97) between the WPVbb determined with a phenological camera and its quantification through ground observation.We show that WPVbb varies strongly (by a factor of 4) from year to year in a given population, and that those variations are linked with temperature conditions during the budburst period, with colder springs associated to a higher differentiation of budburst (higher WPVbb) among trees.Deploying our approach at the continental scale, i.e. throughout phenological cameras networks, would improve the understanding of the spatial (across populations) and temporal (across years) variations of WPVbb, which have strong implications on forest functioning, tree fitness and phenological modelling.

1997 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-123 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeong Ho Lee ◽  
Hayato Hashizume ◽  
Atsushi Watanabe ◽  
Toshitake Fukata ◽  
Susumu Shiraishi ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 123-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Plue ◽  
Ken Thompson ◽  
Kris Verheyen ◽  
Martin Hermy

AbstractThis study investigates how methodological aspects of seed-bank sampling affect seed-bank records in temperate deciduous forests. We focused explicitly on seed-bank records of ancient forest species, which are assumed to lack a persistent seed bank; a hypothesis suspected to be partly due to methodological shortcomings. Through a quantitative review of 31 seed-bank studies in temperate deciduous forests of central and north-west Europe, we quantified the role of sampling methodology in constraining total seed-bank records and seed-bank records of ancient forest species (γ-diversity, average species' retrieval frequency and average seed density). A major methodological trade-off was established between sampled plot area and the number of plots: at an increased number of plots, the area sampled per plot decreased significantly. The total surface area sampled in a study was the primary determinant of γ-diversity, both for overall species richness and for ancient forest species richness. A high retrieval frequency of ancient forest species indicated that few plots were intensively sampled. The parallel increase in total species richness and ancient forest species richness and the non-significance of their ratio in relation to methodological variables suggests that ancient forest species are not particularly rare in the seed bank compared to other species. These results imply that sampling methodology has a far-reaching impact on seed-bank records such as γ-diversity, the detection of ancient forest species and ultimately seed-bank composition. We formulate a set of guidelines to improve the quality of seed-bank studies in temperate deciduous forests.


2005 ◽  
Vol 74 (3) ◽  
pp. 273-281 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pieter Roovers ◽  
Beatrijs Bossuyt ◽  
Hubert Gulinck ◽  
Martin Hermy

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